First Regular Session Seventy-fifth General Assembly STATE OF COLORADO ENGROSSED LLS NO. R25-0839.01 Nicole Myers x4326 SJR25-006 Senate Committees House Committees SENATE JOINT RESOLUTION 25-006 C ONCERNING CONDEMNATION OF TH E PARDONS OF THOSE INVOLVED101 IN THE JANUARY 6, 2021, INSURRECTION AGAINST THE UNITED102 S TATES OF AMERICA.103 WHEREAS, On January 6, 2021, at a rally at The Ellipse outside1 the White House, President Trump, following months of lies about2 widespread voter fraud, claimed the election had been "stolen by3 emboldened radical left Democrats", and told rally attendees "If you don't4 fight like hell, you're not gonna have a country anymore"; and5 WHEREAS, Following President Trump's speech at The Ellipse,6 rally attendees marched to the United States Capitol and many began7 rioting, with official FBI estimates concluding that between 2,000 and8 2,500 people forcibly and illegally breached the Capitol, in what many9 scholars have described as an "attempted self-coup" and "an10 SENATE Final Reading February 10, 2025 SENATE SPONSORSHIP Hinrichsen and Ball, Amabile, Bridges, Coleman, Cutter, Daugherty, Exum, Jaquez Lewis, Jodeh, Kipp, Kolker, Marchman, Michaelson Jenet, Mullica, Roberts, Rodriguez, Snyder, Weissman, Winter F. HOUSE SPONSORSHIP Camacho and Carter, Shading denotes HOUSE amendment. Double underlining denotes SENATE amendment. Capital letters or bold & italic numbers indicate new material to be added to existing law. Dashes through the words or numbers indicate deletions from existing law. insurrection"; and1 WHEREAS, Insurrectionists sought to prevent, and successfully2 postponed, the proceedings of the constitutionally mandated joint session3 of Congress to certify the electoral college results of the freely and fairly4 conducted 2020 presidential election; and5 WHEREAS, Insurrectionists openly called for violence against6 political figures, including chants calling for the hanging of Vice7 President Mike Pence; and8 WHEREAS, A gallows and a noose were erected on Capitol9 grounds during the insurrection; and10 WHEREAS, Undetonated pipe bombs were found after the attack11 outside both the Democratic National Committee and the Republican12 National Committee headquarters; and13 WHEREAS, Due to the heroic efforts of Capitol Police officers,14 the vice president and all members of Congress were successfully15 evacuated from the Capitol before the insurrectionists breached the16 Senate chamber and attempted unsuccessfully to breach the House17 chamber; and18 WHEREAS, Insurrectionists attacked Capitol Police officers with19 brass knuckles, pickaxes, tomahawks, flagpoles, pepper spray, knives, fire20 extinguishers, stolen police riot shields, batons, fencing, destroyed21 furniture, and other makeshift weapons; and22 WHEREAS, Multiple insurrectionists were later charged with, or23 convicted of, illegally carrying firearms during the attack; and24 WHEREAS, There is widespread evidence of premeditated online25 coordination of the insurrection between the Proud Boys, Oath Keepers,26 and Three Percenters, which are organizations that have been cited as27 extremist groups by both the Southern Poverty Law Center and the28 Anti-Defamation League; and29 WHEREAS, One Capitol Police officer died from a stroke brought30 on by the injuries he sustained from multiple assaults by insurrectionists;31 and32 006 -2- WHEREAS, Four Capitol Police officers who defended the1 Capitol later died by suicide; and2 WHEREAS, At least 174 Capitol Police officers were injured, 153 of whom required hospitalization; and4 WHEREAS, $2.7 million in damages were caused to the Capitol5 building and grounds; and6 WHEREAS, Following a request from District of Columbia Mayor7 Muriel Bowser, 1,100 Washington D.C. National Guardsmen were called8 up to restore peace and security to the Capitol and its grounds; and9 WHEREAS, on January 20, 2025, President Trump pardoned, or10 commuted the sentences for, all insurrectionists who were convicted of11 crimes committed during the January 6, 2021, attack on the United States12 Capitol and ensured that cases were dismissed for those who faced13 charges or were under investigation for participation in the attack; and14 WHEREAS, The rule of law, respect for the results of a free and15 fair election, and freedom from political violence are foundational16 cornerstones of the United States Constitution and core tenets of freedom17 and the American way of life; and18 WHEREAS, Those pardons erode the rule of law and signal an19 acceptance of political violence, so long as the violence was committed20 by those who support President Trump; and21 WHEREAS, Such acceptance desecrates the service and sacrifice22 of those who have defended the Constitution against such enemies; now,23 therefore,24 Be It Resolved by the Senate of the Seventy-fifth General Assembly25 of the State of Colorado, the House of Representatives concurring herein: 26 (1) That the Seventy-fifth Colorado General Assembly hereby27 condemns the pardons of those involved in the January 6, 2021,28 insurrection against the United States of America; and29 (2) That the Seventy-fifth Colorado General Assembly further30 condemns the firing of dedicated, selfless FBI agents assigned to said31 insurrection cases, who committed their careers to the defense of our32 006 -3- nation and its sovereignty.1 Be It Further Resolved, That copies of this Joint Resolution be sent2 to Governor Jared Polis and the members of Colorado's congressional3 delegation.4 006 -4-